Sotheby’s sued over Caravaggio attribution

The auction house sticks by its cataloguing of a painting sold in 2006 as a copy not an autograph work

By Melanie Gerlis. Web onlyPublished online: 14 February 2013

Sir Denis Mahon's version of The Cardsharps on view in Trapani, Sicily

Sotheby’s is being sued for damages over a work it attributed to a “follower” of Caravaggio that sold at auction in London to the late collector and scholar Denis Mahon in 2006, for a hammer price of £42,000. Mahon subsequently identified the painting as a work “by the hand of Caravaggio” and obtained an export licence for it that gave an estimated selling price of £10m, according to a claim filed at London’s High Court of Justice.

The claimant is Lancelot William Thwaytes, who consigned the work to auction in 2006; it was catalogued as The Cardsharps, “a 17th-century copy after Caravaggio’s original now in the Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth”. The painting had been in the Thwaytes family since 1962. According to the claim that was filed at the end of January, Thwaytes seeks unspecified damages, interest and costs relating to the price difference between the £42,000 the painting sold for in 2006 and “what its true open market value was in 2006”, had it been attributed to Caravaggio and to be determined by expert evidence. The filing includes the claim that Sotheby’s did not undertake the necessary research and analysis prior to the work’s sale.

In a statement, Sotheby’s says that its “view that the painting is a copy and not an autograph work by Caravaggio is supported by the eminent Caravaggio scholar Richard Spear, as well as by several other leading experts in the field”. Other experts who have gone on the record in support of Sotheby’s view include Helen Langdon, the Italian Baroque scholar and the writer of Caravaggio’s 1998 biography, and Sebastian Schütze, a professor of art history at the University of Vienna. In reference to Mahon’s The Cardsharps, Schütze writes in his 2009 catalogue of Caravaggio’s paintings that “the quality of the execution… rather suggests the painting to be a copy”.

Sotheby’s adds: “Our view is also supported by the market, which gave its verdict on this painting when it set the price at £50,400 [the hammer price plus the buyer’s premium] at Sotheby’s sale in December of 2006. The catalogue in which the painting was included was distributed among the world’s leading curators, art historians, collectors and dealers—had they deemed the attribution different to that given in the catalogue, the price realised would doubtless have reflected that.”

The claim lists the experts in support of Mahon’s attribution as the Caravaggio scholars Mina Gregori and Maurizio Marini; Antonio Paolucci, the director of the Vatican Museums; the curator and Bolognese art expert Daniele Benati; Thomas Scheider, a writer and restorer; and Ulrich Birkmaier, the chief conservator of the Wadsworth Atheneum.

Mahon, who died in 2011, bequeathed 58 works from his collection, valued at around £100m, to UK galleries. He was one of the experts who in 2005 said he was “convinced” that John the Baptist with a lamb, catalogued by Sotheby’s in 1998 as “circle of Caravaggio”, was a genuine late work by the artist, reversing his previously held view (The Art Newspaper, April 2005). He was also one of the experts who supported the identification of a Christ taken into captivity, found in an Irish religious college, as a missing original by Caravaggio (The Art Newspaper, May 1993).

Comments

Prof Didier Bodart is a leading expert also on Caravaggio, lives in Rome, just google the name and you will get all the information, ciao da alvise

8
Mar
13
16:14
CET

TOM, BROOKLINE

More likely 'Artsharps', metaphorical, when both camps have a posture. Caravaggio, or a patron, must have left a clue.

26
Feb
13
15:23
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JIM SKREKAS, DRACUT, MA

I own a Caravaggio that I need to have authenticated. It has been in my home as part of an estate sale. It appears to be very old. I have had no luck in finding any one who has enough expertise in evaluating it. Please help.

25
Feb
13
15:27
CET

JEFF NISBET, MIDLAND PARK, NJ, USA

There is actually some evidence that Mahon may have "discovered" this painting as early as 1988.

20
Feb
13
18:52
CET

DAVID FAMULARO, FEATHERSTON NEW ZEALAND

Based purely on the photo on this page, I'd say definitely not a Caravaggio. It lacks the "insight" that Caravaggio would have brought to any painting. It's in the faces where you can see the difference. There's something flat and dull about them. They don't capture the soul of a real person.

Being a jurist of some standing I will keep my comments to myself as the matter is subjudice.

15
Feb
13
15:14
CET

JOVAN MIZZI, MALTA

Interesting to note that some 60 years ago, from the same provenance, was sold the 'Musicians', a painting also attributed to Caravaggio.

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